Originally posted by: sao123
im not sure you can go in temrs of energy released though...
here is my thinking.
how much of the energy in an earthquake actually gets translated into the tsunami?
is really dependent on vertical upward expansion of the surface of the floor.
in a bomb such as a nuke... nearly all the energy goes into thermal expansion. The yeild may be way lower... but the effiency should be much higher.
Originally posted by: Gibsons
In theory though, nuclear bombs are infinitely scalable. They can be built with as many stages as you have material (or money) for, with each stage progressively larger than the previous. Most all current weapons are small two stage designs yielding around a MT. Tsar Bomba yielded about 50MT, but could've reached its design yield of 100MT quite easily. It was "only" a three stage design. I don't think the U.S. ever built a three stage device, we never went over about 15MT in any case. Build a 4-5 stage device and you might reach multiple gigatons you'd need for a tsunami. If it isn't enough, you could build a 6 or 7 stage device. It might be the size of a large building, but it'll blow up good.
Originally posted by: videogames101
Originally posted by: Gibsons
In theory though, nuclear bombs are infinitely scalable. They can be built with as many stages as you have material (or money) for, with each stage progressively larger than the previous. Most all current weapons are small two stage designs yielding around a MT. Tsar Bomba yielded about 50MT, but could've reached its design yield of 100MT quite easily. It was "only" a three stage design. I don't think the U.S. ever built a three stage device, we never went over about 15MT in any case. Build a 4-5 stage device and you might reach multiple gigatons you'd need for a tsunami. If it isn't enough, you could build a 6 or 7 stage device. It might be the size of a large building, but it'll blow up good.
A nuke the size of a building isn't feasible to build and lift into the ocean, or even feasible to build, the proccess would be astronomicly expensive and transportation would be a nightmare. But say multiple smaller nukes, and your in buisness. Just another way we can kill ourselves. FTW
Originally posted by: Gibsons
Originally posted by: videogames101
Originally posted by: Gibsons
In theory though, nuclear bombs are infinitely scalable. They can be built with as many stages as you have material (or money) for, with each stage progressively larger than the previous. Most all current weapons are small two stage designs yielding around a MT. Tsar Bomba yielded about 50MT, but could've reached its design yield of 100MT quite easily. It was "only" a three stage design. I don't think the U.S. ever built a three stage device, we never went over about 15MT in any case. Build a 4-5 stage device and you might reach multiple gigatons you'd need for a tsunami. If it isn't enough, you could build a 6 or 7 stage device. It might be the size of a large building, but it'll blow up good.
A nuke the size of a building isn't feasible to build and lift into the ocean, or even feasible to build, the proccess would be astronomicly expensive and transportation would be a nightmare. But say multiple smaller nukes, and your in buisness. Just another way we can kill ourselves. FTW
It would be very expensive, but it's feasible. Tsar bomba was carried on an airplane, so it wasn't really that large, maybe 20k pounds. Assume the bomb gets 2x larger for each stage (I think that's reasonable, maybe someone can correct me), and even a 5 stage device really isn't so large. If such weapons had military value, I suspect the U.S. would have a stockpile.
But even if it is really big, the transportation is the easy part: build it in an empty oil tanker or on top of a barge, steam it to wherever and sink it.
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
Linky
Actually one of the most popular nuke vids was actually underwater. Bet all that steam would make for a bad hairday...
Granted that's a low yield, but even a few thousand times that wouldn't really be that big of a wave would it? Easier just to drop the bomb over them.
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
Linky
Actually one of the most popular nuke vids was actually underwater. Bet all that steam would make for a bad hairday...
Granted that's a low yield, but even a few thousand times that wouldn't really be that big of a wave would it? Easier just to drop the bomb over them.
The comments on that vid are soooo ignorant:laugh:
Originally posted by: Ayah
Nuclear weapons aren't powerful in terms of explosive force but their radiation affects.
Originally posted by: gsellis
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
Linky
Actually one of the most popular nuke vids was actually underwater. Bet all that steam would make for a bad hairday...
Granted that's a low yield, but even a few thousand times that wouldn't really be that big of a wave would it? Easier just to drop the bomb over them.
The comments on that vid are soooo ignorant:laugh:
Huh? No comments on the video.
Scroll down, there's like 74
That was the Bikini Baker shot. IIRC, 100ft underwater. No tsunami. Not even close to what is required.
My dad worked in the lab on the animals that were on the ships during the tests to see what radiation effects would be. His work was the effects of radiation on protein and amino acid bonds.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Ayah
Nuclear weapons aren't powerful in terms of explosive force but their radiation affects.
Look at pictures of Hiroshima or Nagasaki after the blasts.. and those were measured in kilotons, not megatons.
A 1 megaton explosion is equal to 2,000,000,000 pounds of TNT... how do you say that isn't powerful in terms of explosive force??
Incidentally, I've always wondered if a reasonably strong nuke would be sufficient to start a major quake, perhaps somewhere in the Cascadia range to set of one a possible megathrust earthquake.. i.e. the nuke doesn't do it - the quake does it.
Ah... your definition of "on the video" and mine are different. On the video, I heard a count down. You meant the comments about the video. Both rightOriginally posted by: jagec
Huh? No comments on the video.
Scroll down, there's like 74![]()
Diminishing returns because of inverse square IIRC. Still 1 mile of total destruction vs 5 miles is nothing to sneeze at (don't quotes those figures as I cannot swear by them at the moment).Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Ayah
Nuclear weapons aren't powerful in terms of explosive force but their radiation affects.
Look at pictures of Hiroshima or Nagasaki after the blasts.. and those were measured in kilotons, not megatons.
A 1 megaton explosion is equal to 2,000,000,000 pounds of TNT... how do you say that isn't powerful in terms of explosive force??
Incidentally, I've always wondered if a reasonably strong nuke would be sufficient to start a major quake, perhaps somewhere in the Cascadia range to set of one a possible megathrust earthquake.. i.e. the nuke doesn't do it - the quake does it.
Originally posted by: gsellis
Diminishing returns because of inverse square IIRC. Still 1 mile of total destruction vs 5 miles is nothing to sneeze at (don't quotes those figures as I cannot swear by them at the moment).Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Ayah
Nuclear weapons aren't powerful in terms of explosive force but their radiation affects.
Look at pictures of Hiroshima or Nagasaki after the blasts.. and those were measured in kilotons, not megatons.
A 1 megaton explosion is equal to 2,000,000,000 pounds of TNT... how do you say that isn't powerful in terms of explosive force??
Incidentally, I've always wondered if a reasonably strong nuke would be sufficient to start a major quake, perhaps somewhere in the Cascadia range to set of one a possible megathrust earthquake.. i.e. the nuke doesn't do it - the quake does it.
But a nuke causing a quake is a Hollywood thing. Compared to real forces of nature, nukes are insignificant. Hollywood likes to give too much credit to men as it makes good story. Like we actually matterIt is all about scale. Maybe in the exact right spot of max pressure, a well-placed nuke would break the friction holding the system in place. But, we still aren't smart enough to find those points. If we did, we would be much better at predicting earthquakes.